#opg $OPG I spent an afternoon reading about OpenGradient.
Not because someone told me to.
Just because the question nagged at me.
Who actually trusts AI outputs right now.
#OPG
Traders do.
Protocols do.
Agents running autonomously definitely do.
And most of them have no way of knowing if what came back was real.
Or hallucinated.
Or quietly wrong in a way that compounds.
OpenGradient is trying to fix the part nobody talks about —
not whether AI is powerful
but whether AI is *checkable.*
They run inference on-chain.
Cryptographic proofs attach to the output.
You get a model hub with 2,000+ models.
MemSync lets agents carry memory across sessions.
a16z crypto is behind it.
None of that is the interesting part to me.
The interesting part is the bet they're making.
That verifiability matters even when nobody checks.
That the proof being *possible* changes something.
I'm not fully convinced.
I'm not unconvinced either.
I think about documents that get stamped and filed and never opened again.
The stamp still meant something was done correctly.
Maybe that's what @OpenGradient is building
not a system people actively audit
but one where auditing is finally, actually possible.
That feels small until it isn't.
Not because someone told me to.
Just because the question nagged at me.
Who actually trusts AI outputs right now.
#OPG
Traders do.
Protocols do.
Agents running autonomously definitely do.
And most of them have no way of knowing if what came back was real.
Or hallucinated.
Or quietly wrong in a way that compounds.
OpenGradient is trying to fix the part nobody talks about —
not whether AI is powerful
but whether AI is *checkable.*
They run inference on-chain.
Cryptographic proofs attach to the output.
You get a model hub with 2,000+ models.
MemSync lets agents carry memory across sessions.
a16z crypto is behind it.
None of that is the interesting part to me.
The interesting part is the bet they're making.
That verifiability matters even when nobody checks.
That the proof being *possible* changes something.
I'm not fully convinced.
I'm not unconvinced either.
I think about documents that get stamped and filed and never opened again.
The stamp still meant something was done correctly.
Maybe that's what @OpenGradient is building
not a system people actively audit
but one where auditing is finally, actually possible.
That feels small until it isn't.